Walkerton Independent, Volume 46, Number 29, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 December 1920 — Page 2
Help That Bad Back! Why be miserable with a "bad back?" It’s time you found out what is wrong! Kidney weakness often causes much suffering from backache, lameness, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness and kidney irregularities. Neglected, it may lead to dropsy, gravel or Bright’s disease, but if taken in time it is usually easily corrected by using Doan's Kidney Pills. Doan's hare helped thousands. An lowa Case
job I ( nnmnlalalw »IJ *1
completely rid of the annoying pains I haven't had any trouble since.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S VJUV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
Disapproval Resented. She was two years old, and could feed herself, but being an Imperious child she preferred to have her father feed her. Her father used a soup spoon, but the child did very nicely. When she had swallowed Its contents her father looked at her open mouth j plainly showing that he was amazed at her capacity. This apparently an- ■ noyed his daughter, because she pushed him away, saying, “Stop it, you crazy thing.” Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle oi CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that 11 Bears the In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castorii Economy at Least Stubby—Let Percy umpire this - game? Why, I should say not! What does he know about baseball? Bobby—But that’s not it. You see, his dad is a doctor an’ will be able r take care of him fer nothin’. It’s often as well to know how to hold your pen as your tongue.
OH, DEAR! MY BACK! Merciful Heavens, how my hack hurts in the morning 1 ” It’s all
1^ _. Im. • w s ■ 1 - --^ ’ ^WTRv * '\v II Wji
due to an over-abund-ance of that poison called uric acid. The kidneys are not able to get rid of ft. Such conditions you can readily overcome, and prolong
life by taking “Anuric” (anti-uric-acid). This can be obtained at almost a™
““ — anv J- 1 - atore. aunn. •When your kidneys get sluggish
and clog, you suffer from backache, ack-headache,’ dizzy spells, or twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism or gout; or sleep is disturbed two or three times a Dight, get Dr. Pierce’s Anuric, it will put new life into your kidneys and your entire system. Send Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., ten cents for trial package. Elkhabt, Ind.—" When I started to take Anuric the kidney excretion was thick and cloudy, sometimes I was disturbed fifteen times in one night. lam advanced in years and quite timid about taking advertised remedies, but I felt perfectly safe in taking Anuric because I had been so greatly helped by Dr. Pierce’s other remedies I took one package and my rest at night is unbroken, and consequently my general health is greatly improved.”—Mbs . 8. J. Andkkson, No. 700 Marion Street. NR Tablets tons and strengthen organs of digestion and elimination, improve appetite, stop sick headaches, relieve biliousness, correct constipation. They act promptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet thoroughly. * ’ । '। fP Tonight, Tomorrow Alright • | I । New Life for Sick Man Eatonic Works Magic g_ ————l . ■■■!■! Wil “I have taken only two boxes of Eatonic and feel like a new man. Il has done me more good than anything else,” writes C. O. Frappir. Eatonic is the modern remedy for acid stomach, bloating, food repeating and indigestion. It quickly takes ur and carries out the acidity and gas and enables the stomach to digest tht ' naturally. That means not only , «ain and discomfort bul ' -»h from the food ■ « trifl* ; /lan ledies t< i y. Wriu iucah, Kj
i WILSON TO ACT AS AN UMPIRE Accepts League of Nations’ Invitation to Mediate Armenia Imbroglio. WILL PICK A REPRESENTATIVE ’resident Agrees to Use Good Offices to End Hostilities Against the Armenian People — Without Authority to Employ Force. Washington, Dec. 2.—President Wilson has accepted the invitation of the League of Nations to act as mediator in the Armenian situation. Ihe President’s acceptance is conditioned upon the use of moral inllui ?nce. He explains that he is without i authority to employ force without the
Mrs. R. Kranthoff, 626 S. Second St., Perry, lowa, says: “My back was weak and I Shad steady pains, awhich would turn Ito sharp, cutting ’catches when I at- | tempted to stoop lover. My head lached and I was [very nervous. I Ibegan using Doan's Kidney Pills and after taking three or four boxes I was
consent of congress. In accepting the invitation to mediite to end the hostilities now directed against the Armenian people. President Wilson wrote President Hymans □f the league assembly that he did so । an assurances of “the moral and diplomatic support of the principal powI ?rs, and relying on the league council i to suggest to him the avenue through which his proffer should be made. He added that he was without pow?r to use the military forces of the United States to enforce mediation, my material contribution depending upon congress, “which,” he says, “is । lot now in session and whose action j I could not forecast.” President Wilson’s letter to M. Hy- ‘ mans follows: “I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your cabled message setting forth the resolution adopted t>y the assembly of the League of Nations, requesting the council of the league to arrive at an understanding with the governments with the view to intrusting a power with the task as taking the necessary measures to stop the hostilities in Armenia. “You offered to the United States ' the opportunity of undertaking the I humanitarian task of using its good i olives to end the present traeedv be- '
— —— — pivcvut UUfcVUV Us ing enacted in Armenia, and you assure me that your proposal involves no repetition of the Invitation to accept a mandate for Armenia. “While the invitation to accept the mandate for Armenia hast been rejected by the senate of the United States, this country has repeatedly declared its solicitude for the fate and welfare of the Armenian people in a manner and to an extent that Justifies you in saying that the fate of Armenia has always been of special interest to the American people. “I am without authorization to offer or employ the military forces of the United States in anv nroiect far !
—anj yiujeci iof the relief of Armenia, and any material Contribution iSLOII & 1 s*J
which is
1 not now in session and whose action I could not forecast. I am willing,
however, upon assurances of the moral and diplomatic support of the principal powers, and in a spirit of sympathetic response to the request of the council of the League of Nations, to use my good offices and to proffer my personal mediation to a representative whom 1 may designate, to end the hostilities that are now being waged against the Armenian people and to bring peace and accord to the contend- ' ing parties, relying upon the council . of the League of Nations to suggest 1 to me the avenues through which my ; proffer should be conveyed and " parties to whom it should he uu I dressed. WOODROW WILSON.” GIVE UP 500 JOBS TO OTHERS “Golden Rule” Employees Vote to Surrender Positions for Month to Unemployed. Cincinnati, Dec. 2.—The 500 employees of the Nash Clothing Manufacturing company in this city, which is operated on the “golden rule” basis, at a meeting decided to surrender voluntarily their positions for a month, either January or February, in order to give work to the unemployed of other clothing factories. WORK IN U. S. IS SCARCE .Spaniards Are Warned Not to Go to America in Search of Employment j Madrid, Nov. 30. —Spaniards who In- I tend to go to the United Stares are I warned in a note published by the secretary of foreign affairs that num- , hers of their compatriots in the States, out of employment owing to the industrial crisis, are desirous of returning to Spain, but are without ' means. Big Holdup in Brooklyn. New York, Dec. 2.—Four bandits . ' h( d up two messengers of the Man- ■ j hattan brokerage firm of Kean, Taylor : & Company in Brooklyn, seized a package said to contain $46“,000 in Liberty bonds, fired a fusillade ami escaped. More Mail Loot Is Found. Omaha, Dee. 2. —Postal Inspector W. • M. Coble of Omaha announced that • I Keith Collins, returned from Oklahoj ma in connection with the mail car ’ robbery, led federal officers to a cache j where 823,800 of the loot was' found. Victory for Small Nations. Geneva, Dec. I.—The council of the ' League of Nations approved the pro- I feet for a permanent mandates cmn--1 mission, a< cepting the proposal to have the commission comprise five nonman-j datory and four mandatory [lowers. Postal Telegraph Rates Up. Nev York, Dec. I.—lncreases of 20 per cent in n»t»— and 10 per cent in salaries to employe's, effective De- ' cemlier 1, tire announced by the Postal
DR. B. J. GRATANA ,1 111111 l s x \ ? fe.’ -f Ax v---'
Dr. B. J. Gratana is tne commercial attache of the Netherlands legation and recently arrived In Washington. U. S. WEEKLY MARKET REPORT Active Demand for Cash Wheat to Fill Export Sales—Hogs Decline 75 Cents Per 100 Pounds. ma RKETGRAM. ' w '. nlted states Bureau of Markets ) 1 JJV’ J — For Week Ending ciKh ui S’RAli's— Active demand for 11 ex P°rt sales reported m City and Omaha. Good millde ™ and Chicago and Minneapolis. Canadian wheat bought Novemlow X 7 / i° com . e to Chicago to mix with wheat to deliver on wK ’mo COntra i CtS ’ N ° 1 hard 'heat 10c over December future. No 5 j , C . Orn 5 -* c over December; P.O. 4 3'2 to 4^c over. Mixed No. 3 sell■ng at price of December corn to 1c und®'’ Report that Jowa bankers not I esslng farmers to sell their new corn. Canadian farmers reported not selling wheat treely. For the week. Chicago December wheat lost 3%c. closing at ♦t and December corn gained 2c, closng at 66%. Chicago March wheat 2%c May corn > higher at .d%c. Minneapolis March wheat 2c lower at $1.49. Kansas City March unchanged at $1.49%. Winnipeg’ May 4c lower at $1.69. ' HAI AND FEED—lncreased hav recetpts and continued light demand,
■ caused further price reductions of $1 tc ’ !° n 1 the P r ' nci Pal hay market* I steadv r^ We 4 k . Eocal demand held prices steady for the best grades in a few mar. ? but . buyers generally are awaiting o^er prices. Low grain p.ices are now , factor - Shipping demand It limited and not sufficient to absorb inV^ Sed .,- r ? < l eipts - No 1 timothv New ™ oM' 001 pneinnati. $30.25; Chicago, Si,’ RRhmond. $35. Over supplies ol wheat teeds caused break of $2 to $i for wheat by-products. With corn selling around $25 per ton Chicago, buyert do not appear anxious to purchase hominy feed and gluten feed at $35 to s4{ Demand remains poor for prac- I tioally all feeds. I ERUITS AND VEGETABLES—North- ! ern round white potatoes declined. 20 tc me- bS «,-o f ’ °' b mar kets, reachto ’V 73 ' Car lots lost 26 tc 30c, Chicago closing $1.65 to SI.BO. Baldwin apples fairly steady at western New ? or ?, ® hl PP ln K points, at $4 to $4.26 ,
ly per bbl. Yellow Globe• lost 10 to 150 per loom- Astern reachL-'T mopping points. T7rvw sTorv ivn mfatq
LIVE STOCK AND MEATS—Com5 pared with a week ago. hogs at Chlcagc
p<vivu wnn tv iiv^n ex i viu' show an average net decline of 75c pe: 100 lbs. Good beef steers were firm tc 25c higher, but medium grades ranged
50c to $1 lower. heifers and feed Ing steers practically unchanged. Veai calves declined $1.50. Fat and feeding lambs reversed their former position, feeding lambs selling today fully 75c pet 100 lbs. under fat stock. Fat ewes advanced 25c. November 29 top Chlcagc prices: Hogs $10.45: yearling steers. $17.50: good beef steers. $14.50 to sls. DAIRY PRODUCTS—Butter marketi broke sharply the past week. Chlcagc led the decline and other markets followed during the latter part of the week November 29 prices: 92 score fully 7< lower at eastern markets, 5c lower Chicago, New York. Philadelphia, Boston 92 score closed at 57c. Chicago, 53c. PONZI IS GIVEN FIVE YEARS Boston “Get-Rich-Quick" Wizard It Sentenced on One Count—Admits . Mail Fraud. Boston, MnS) Dec. 1. —Charles Ponzi, promoter of the quick rick scheme in which thousands of persons invested millions of dollars before it collapsed last August, pleaded guilty to using the' mails in a sch me to defraud in the federal District court. Sentence of five years in the Plymouth county jail was imposed h? Judge Hale. The court took Into consideration only the first count of one indictment of forty-four counts, ir which it was charged that Ponzi had represented falsely that he was able to pay interest at the rate of 50 per cent in 45 days from profits made In international postal reply coupons. ROB TAXI OFFICE OF $51,000 Thugs Club Nightwatchman and Blow Safe Open and Escape With Money. New York, Nov. 27.—Three armed thugs clubbed the night watchman of a motor taxicab service on East Six-ty-fourth street, and after binding and blindfolding him, blew the office safe and made their escape with .$31,01X4 in cash and promissory notes. Negro Population of Gary. Washington. Dec. 2.—The negre population of Gary, Ind., was an nounced by the census bureau as 5,299 an increase of 4,916 or 1283.6 per cent The white population was given as 30,048, an increase of 33,645. Raid Chicago I. W. W.’s. Chicago. Doc. 2. —Thirty-eight alleged radicals were arrested in a raid by Detective Sergeants Egan, McDonough and McGarry of the detectm bureau at I. W. W. headquarters at 931 West Madison street. Plans U. S. Emigrant Board. Washington, Dee. 1. —Senator Sterling of South Dakota, a Republican member of the senate immigratior committee, announced that he would introduce a bill creating a federal immigration board. U. S. Mine Sweeper Wrecked. Duxbury, M. ss., Dec. 1. — Ihe mint ^wciper Swan, famous as a wartime figure for its part in laying the Nortl sea mim* barrage, is a wreck on th* Gurnet -mml spit, with its crew salt , ashore.
wnni pS&»Who,e S e" 0“ IU^tercome by Lydia fc. egetable Compound.
I. first took Lydia E. Ie Compound for a iomplete nervous . ireaKdown followng the birth of my , jldest child. ap too soon which caused serious female trouble. I was bo weak that I was not able to be on my feet but very little and could not do my housework at all. I had a bad pain in my left side and it ly if I stepped off a every vr Q nc da y one of your bookwho has own in the yard and I read that I There were so many
"— it. mere — ---— - went to tn ^helped by your medicine seen* o try it and my busband i secor eo t me > bottle, it , tak er. ag h I felt relief after the 1 was a.- hept on until I had 1 year 1 ttles and by that time I boy, i cppH vo a ten, pound since *. \more children ’ 1 W 1 y^,S 1 going • 13e £ or m y good health it ail i ommend your medicine i.”—-Mrs. Eva E. Shay, whenevt nq Garnett, * I I S s a dry cough P o< pyou awake? Ikem balsam! I stop the tickle w * akes you cough I ■ tUAJJANTWO^ 'l*3 Universally. c, i P ^ a * been to France he was ‘ ‘ n< P ie llu Irlng his slight knowlvery fona of , “ „„ friend one evei
rp 'olrt mean?” asked his Vt hat do ; friend. , . , . . , ood-by—an revolr* Is •woa-hTta ’ .r"’."! ionß "“ se '' „ । i . be linguist. said the would ... . . . _ 11 retorted hfs friend. MW?! 1 ’ cld to youl” «vvb cnr ° lc rth does that mean?” Uhat onea fkl means . Rood _ by . 1Q CarboHc ac waß the u any language,^"* tj ef n of a Friend. o e t n a friend as “one Some one . ® than j am t 0 ray . X?;..\ ™ e true to ourself. He ai I _ , - i j c. „ «e highest offices I selves- -—*3 j *•»> Is ;o "I , * _ ,Qf to Its b* wt the' 10-el that does not
make us long to better and stronger for its t sake, and h gratitude for Its possession, is not the highest type of love.
Sure Relief I Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief RELL-ANS i WfOR INDIGESTION BETTER DEAD I Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take COLD MEDAL Th# national remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it is an Aiemy of all pains ra> suiting from kidnap liver and uric acid - troubles. AU drugplsts, three sizes. lee If for the name Co" 4 Medal oa every bee and accept ao imitation Appetite Keen and Bowels ' Relieved You can relish your meals without fear of upsetting your liver or stomach if you will put your faith ini a a ryrrCarter’s Little CARTER 5 Liver Pills. Jj^H|TTL,K Foul accumu- >3 W I V/ gr » lations that 28 K h m a ar* poison the w? i"^ a ^^>s? blood are ex- ... pelled from the bowels and headache, dizziness and sallow skin are relieved. Small Pili—Small Dose—Small Price 1 Cuticura Soap The Healthy Shaving Soap Cuticura Soap without mug Everywhere 2Sc. 1 _ —_— Bronchial T roubles Soothe the irritation and you relieve the distress. Do both quickly and effectively by using promptly a dependable remedy-— ■• • . W N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 49-1920. I
improved uniform international lesson I Teacher of English Bible m the Moody ■ | Bible Institute of Chicago.! I ■ ((c), t'.>2o. Western N I I
LESSON FOR DECEMBER 12 I I WHAT THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN | IS LIKE. ■ ness. and peace, and joy in me I । Ghost.-Rom T4:17. , _ Mark I I ADDITIONAL MAThKIAO 4:26-32; Luke 13:18-21. Good I I PRIMARY TOPIC —Sowing i I < G j°UN?OR TOPlC—Short Stories That Je^NTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC “voSwi E n Sn 'adult' TOPIC YOUNG 1 LOL LL Christ s
The Supreme Importance or Sacrifice for the Lost. I. The Parable of the Hid Treasure (v. 44). t i- - •• • give up for which the s nner sa i vat ion everything in 'mm* rensons: ChrT^t Ts not hidden In a field, hut has been lifted up and made a spectacle to the world. 2. Nobody has ever been obliged to buy the world in order to get Christ. 3. Salvation cannot be purchased, for it is God’s free and gracious gift. 4. No warrant is ever held out to a man to conceal his religion after he has obtained it. In order to find ground that is safe and that we may appreciate its beauty and symmetry let us break up the parable into its component parts: 1. The field. This is the world (v. 38). 2. The treasure. In Psalm 135:4 we are told that Israel, the chosen people. Is His treasure. The same truth is ( set forth in different places and ways । (Pent. 7:6-8; 14:2; 26:18; 32: 8,9). 1 The kingdom of heaven as to its true , ( relation and bearing is now hidden. ' Christ was primarily sent to the Jews; ! ! It was for their sake, the hid treasure, that He bought the field. 3. The purchaser —the Son of God
(John 3:16). 4. The- purchase price. This was the precious blood of Jesus Christ. God's beloved Son. which is worth infinitely more than silver and gold and the treasures of earth (I Pet. 1 :13, 19; Isa. 53). 11. The Parable of the Merchantman Seeking Pearls (vv. 43, 46). The view that this merchantman represents the sinner seeking salvation Is contrary to the whole teaching of Scripture. This would make the sinner to be seeking for Christ, while Christ is as Indifferent as a lifeless pearl. The whole burden of revelation irthT garden away from God, and that the Father. Son and Holy Spirit are all actively engaged in seeking for lost men. 1. The merchantman. He Is without question Christ. He Is actively engaged in the search for pearls. In
this search he discovers one pearl of great price. 2. The purchase price. The merchantman sold all—impoverished himself in order to buy the pearl. Christ Impoverished Himself (Phil. 2:6-8) to purchase the one pearl of great price by His own precious blood (I Pet. 1:18. 19; Eph. 5:25). Salvation is without money and without price. 3. The pearl of great price. This is the church. Christ, the merchantman, will find other pearls of great value, but the peerless gem set above all others will be the chruch which He • has purchased with His own blood. This truth is in harmony with the general teaching of Scripture, which sets forth the different bodies of the redeemed. The redeemed family of God is made up of different orders, but the one order which is exalted to the highest place is the church, which He purchased with His own blood and of which He became the vital head through the resurrection from the dead (Col. 1:18). 111. The Parable of the Dragnet (vv. 47-50). This parable gives us a picture of the consummation of the kingdom. Note the parts of the parable: 1. The sea. This word when used in a figurative sense denotes peoples or multitudes (Dan. 7:3; Rev. 17:15). This means, then, that out of this world shall be gathered a multitude of people, good and bad. 2. The dragnet. The word "net” is - properly translated dragnet. The dragnet cast into the sea, then, means the preaching of the Gospel in this age. 3. The dragnet drawn to the shore when full. This means that when God's purpose is made full regarding the preaching of the Gospel in this age. account will be taken of the results. 4. Assortment made by the angels, fn the day of this accounting the angels will be the agents which shall separate the saved from the unsaved. 5. The destiny of the bad fish. Tin angels which are sent forth shall sever the wicked from among the just, ami shall cast them into the furnace of tire, where there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth. God’s Minute. Don’t you touch the edge of the great gladness that is in the world, now and then, in spite of your own little single worries? Well, that's what God means; and the worry is the interruption. He never means that. If you are glad for one minute in the day, that is His minute; the minute He means, and works for. —A. D. T. Whitney. The Spiritual. It does not. occur to us how natural the spiritual is. We still strive for some strange, transcendent thing; we seek to promote life by methods as unnatural as they prove unsuccessful; ‘iml only the utter incomprehensibility of the whole region prevents us seeing- -what we already half suspect—how completely we are missing the "vud.
I Another Royal Suggestion | MUFFINS and COFFEE CAKE | From the New Royal Cook Book 1 Breakfast is too I I often eaten as a I ■ 11 duty rather than a joy. I I The Royal Educational I | Department presents I 11 here some breakfast I ■ l| dishes that will stimu- I || late the most critical I . v , | DoYaL I I ISXSS I I 8 s Powder g 1 tablespoon sugar I g I HAWING I I hS’„po»».hort.n,n, DfllL*l‘' J ■ I Sift together, flour, bak- | l l ^'^ POWDER ■ I muffin tins and put two V w w ■ 1 tablespoons of batter in i || lo S Bake in hot oven I | to to 25 minutes. Absolutely Pure Coffee Cake Ml 5 tablespoons sugar » 4 te powd°e n r S R ° ya ’ E**”” Made from Cream of Tartar 2 tablespoons shortening derived from grapes. ■ I % cup milk Mix and sift dry Ingredl- ■ I ents; add melted shortenj , Ing and enough milk to ■ I make very stiff batter. S Spread ^4-inch thick in ■ I greased pan; add top 1 ■" W ' mixture. Bake about 30 rnrr ■ I minutes in moderate oven. OJLIN 1 r ixt-fc. « Top Mixture New , R 0 ?*! Cook B< ^ k £ ! K containing scores of deft I 2 tablespoons flour lightful. economical recfl I 1 tablespoon cinnamon i peß , many of them the ■ I 3 tablespoons ®ugar most famous in use today, g : 3 tablespoons shortening Address 9 I Mix dry Ingredients; rub ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. i i",7^ S i before baking.
In the Crowd. “What are you making such a fuss about? I thought you were a good loser.” “I am, as far as an election is concerned,” answered the excited citizen. “What I am concerned about is the loss of a perfectly good two-dollar watch.” WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’■ Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medieine. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they
should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test. of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. — —•Svn<rT-R r “ fc —u «»»Tt treatment at once, r However, if you wish first to test thi great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Evening Star. Any planet that rises before midnight is called an “evening star.” If it does not rise until after midnight it is a morning star. These terms are never applied to the real stars, which are called “fixed stars,” but only to planets, which are not stars. A Dry Answer. Scoutmaster (emphatically)—John- । ny, what are you doing there in the rain? Tenderfoot — Gettln’ wet. — Boys’ Life. GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER The Remedy With a Record of Fiftyfour Years of Surpassing Excellence. Those who suffer from nervous dyspepsia, constipation, indigestion, ! torpid liver, dizziness, headaches, coming up of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other indications of fermentation and indigestion will find Green's August Flower a most effective and efficient assistant In the restoration of nature’s functions and a return to health and happiness. There could be no better testimony of the value of this remedy for these troubles than the fact that its use for the last fifty-four years has extended Into many thousands of households all over j the civilized world and no Indication of j any failure has been obtained in all that time where medicine could effect : relief. Sold everywhere.—Adv. Artificial Light Best. “They say that crops grow better under electric lights.” “One crop certainly does—wild , oats.” How one treasures the smile of j strangers who overhear his witty re- I mark.
vA' 4 * Think what that means to you in XbfLJrar * -t?" 1 -• good hard dollars with the great dex . m and for wheat at high prices. Many y' farmers in Western Canada have paid for their land 'uO w* f rom a single crop. The same sue . _ s may still be yours, for you can buy on easy terms. Farm Land at sls to S3O an Acre Ilocated near thriving towns, good m; r r :>iys - >and of a kind which grows 20 to 45 bushels of wheat to the acre. Good grazing lands at low prices cone- - tt ’ >ur gram farm en- ' “ble you to reap the profits from stock raising and dairying. ^ earn Facte Western Canada VOvK —low taxation (none on imp: c~ ~ r- hful climate, good £ v schools, churcH tionships, a prosperous and ■ industrious , f h ' of farm en portnoi tie* i ■ Manitoba, Ss'xvc * * rai-rcad rates, etc., v - ® B c. J. Broughton. Room 412. 112 W. Adams Street. Chicago, Ul4 I M. V. Machines. 176 Jefferson Avenue. Detroit, Me
Mitigating the Horror. We don’t believe in lynching. It’s brutal. There’s something excessively Impolite about it The business of lynching lacks innate refinement. But if we did believe in lynching we’4 limit it to—1. People who look over your shoulder. 2. End-seat hogs in street cars, 3. Men who bump limousines wttl» their flivvers. 4. The office associate who borrows two bits. 5. Girls who chew gum and use Up sticks. 6. Chronic reformers. 7. Private citizens who know how to rim the country.—Richmond TimesDispatch. Fortunate is the woman who can ; travel down life’s highway at the exexpense of her husband.
A New Lo^ Saw Cat* Faster, Costa Less, Make* More Money for Users Works While Too Beat. A new Improved power log saw, now being offered, outdoes all other log saws in cutting wood quickly and at little cost. A new 4-cycle, high power motor equipped with Oscillating Magneto—no batteries to fail you—makes the saw bite through logs faster than other log saws. It finishes its cut and is ready for another before the ordinary saw is well started. This log saw—The Ottawa—hag a specially designed friction clutch, controlled by a lever, which starts and stops the saw without stopping the engine. Others have imitated, but no other power log saw has this improvement । just like the Ottawa. The Ottawa Log Saw sells for less money than any power saw of anything like its siza, SJricfb j Applied For The Improved Model. 4-H. P. Ottawa Log Saws One man wheels this outfit from cut to cut and log to log like a barrow. j Separate attachments cut down trees and cut up branches. Extra power lets i the engine do heavy work of all kinds. Owners of the Ottawa Log Saw laugh at coal shortages and are making big money with ease, the machine doing the work. 35 to 50 cords cut any day, rainy ■ or dry, by one man, are normal figures. ! And wood is approaching S2O a cordt | The Ottawa is compact, simple and durable. It sells for cash or easy payments ! and is guaranteed. If you have wood to I cut the Ottawa Log Saw will be the most satisfactory machine you've ever owned. We suggest that you write the Ottawa Mfg. Co., 2724 Wood St, Ottaj wa, Kas., for their complete new lllu^ I trated book and prices, sent free to all readers of this paper. FRESK SMOKKU FROZEN Tkfl- SALTEO __ GREEN i f r> SEND FOR COMPLETE PRICE LIST
